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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 The Boy Who Dreamed Of Fire

The golden light of morning stretched across the quiet village of Emberfield, brushing gently against rows of wheat that swayed like waves under the soft wind. It was the kind of morning that promised nothing new—just another day of labor, routine, and repetition. For most of the villagers, that was enough. But for a boy named Flame, it felt like a cage.

Flame drove his hoe into the soil with more force than necessary, the metal biting deep into the earth. Sweat trickled down his forehead despite the cool breeze, and his breath came slightly heavier than it should have. His body was used to this work—years of farming had built strength into his arms—but his mind was elsewhere, far beyond the endless fields of Emberfield. He paused, leaning on the handle of his tool, and lifted his gaze toward the distant hills. They stood like silent guardians at the edge of the world, hiding everything he had ever wanted to see.

"Still staring at those hills, huh?"

Flame glanced over his shoulder to see his father approaching, carrying a bundle of harvested crops. His expression was calm, but there was a knowing look in his eyes.

"I just… wonder what's out there," Flame admitted, rubbing the back of his neck. "There's got to be more than this, right?"

His father set the bundle down and wiped his hands on his worn clothes. "There is always more," he said quietly. "But wanting more and chasing it are two different things."

Flame frowned slightly. "I'm not afraid to chase it."

His father gave a small smile, though it didn't quite reach his eyes. "I know. That's what worries me."

The conversation ended there, as it often did. Flame returned to his work, but his thoughts lingered. He didn't hate the fields—not really. This land had fed his family for generations. But every swing of his tool felt like a reminder that his life had already been decided for him. Stay. Work. Survive. Repeat.

A sudden tremor interrupted his thoughts.

It was faint at first—so faint he almost dismissed it as his imagination. But then it came again, stronger this time, sending a subtle vibration through the ground beneath his feet. The wheat rustled unnaturally, not in response to the wind, but to something deeper.

Flame froze.

"…Did you feel that?"

His father looked around, his expression sharpening. "Yeah."

The tremor faded as quickly as it had come, leaving behind an uneasy silence. The birds that had once chirped cheerfully were now gone, their absence more noticeable than their presence had been. Even the wind seemed to hesitate.

Flame exhaled slowly. "Just an earthquake, right?"

"Maybe," his father replied, though his tone lacked certainty.

Flame tried to shrug it off and returned to his work, but the rhythm was broken. Each movement felt slightly off, as if the ground beneath him might shift again at any moment. The air itself felt heavier, charged with something he couldn't name.

By midday, the village had returned to its usual pace, though the unease lingered in quiet glances and hushed conversations. Flame sat near the small stream at the edge of the fields, cupping water in his hands and splashing it onto his face. The coolness should have been refreshing, but instead, he noticed something strange.

The water… wasn't flowing normally.

It twisted slightly, forming small, unnatural swirls that moved against the current before snapping back into place. Flame stared at it, his brow furrowing.

"…Okay, that's weird."

He dipped his fingers into the stream again, watching carefully this time. For a brief moment—just a second—the surface shimmered, like light reflecting off something beneath. Then it was gone.

Flame pulled his hand back slowly.

"Maybe I'm just tired…"

He stood and stretched, trying to shake off the strange feeling crawling up his spine. But as he looked toward the distant hills again, he noticed something else—something he couldn't ignore.

The air above the horizon flickered.

Not like heat… not like wind… but like something invisible was moving through it. A ripple. A distortion. Something that didn't belong.

Flame's chest tightened slightly, though he didn't know why.

"…What is going on today?"

He laughed under his breath, trying to dismiss it, but the sound felt hollow. For the first time in a long while, Emberfield didn't feel small—it felt exposed. Like the world beyond those hills wasn't just waiting… but watching.

As the afternoon wore on, the tremors returned, each one slightly stronger than the last. Tools rattled. Wooden fences creaked. A few villagers gathered in small groups, whispering nervously, but no one had answers.

Flame continued working, though his focus was gone. His mind drifted again—not just to dreams of adventure, but to questions. What was causing the tremors? Why did the air feel so strange? And why did it feel like something was about to happen?

He didn't have answers.

But deep inside, something stirred.

Not power.

Not destiny.

Just a feeling.

A pull.

A quiet, unexplainable sense that his life—this simple, repetitive life—was standing on the edge of change.

As the sun began to set, painting the sky in shades of orange and crimson, Flame stood alone at the edge of the field. The wind picked up slightly, brushing past him as if urging him forward.

He clenched his fists, his gaze fixed on the horizon.

"One day…" he murmured. "I'll go beyond those hills."

There was no grand declaration. No sudden surge of power. No sign that he was anything more than a farmer's son with big dreams.

And yet…

Far beneath the land, something ancient stirred.

The tremors were not random.

The world was not quiet.

And though Flame did not know it—

The path toward becoming one of the Three Heroes had already begun

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